Abstract

High-throughput and large-scale measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlF) are of great interest to investigate the photosynthetic performance of plants in the field. Here, we tested the capability to rapidly, precisely, and simultaneously estimate the number of pulse-amplitude-modulation ChlF parameters commonly calculated from both dark- and light-adapted leaves (an operation which usually takes tens of minutes) from the reflectance of hyperspectral data collected on light-adapted leaves of date palm seedlings chronically exposed in a FACE facility to three ozone (O3) concentrations (ambient air, AA; target 1.5 × AA O3, named as moderate O3, MO; target 2 × AA O3, named as elevated O3, EO) for 75 consecutive days. Leaf spectral measurements were paired with reference measurements of ChlF, and predictive spectral models were constructed using partial least squares regression. Most of the ChlF parameters were well predicted by spectroscopic models (average model goodness-of-fit for validation, R2: 0.53–0.82). Furthermore, comparing the full-range spectral profiles (i.e., 400–2400 nm), it was possible to distinguish with high accuracy (81% of success) plants exposed to the different O3 concentrations, especially those exposed to EO from those exposed to MO and AA. This was possible even in the absence of visible foliar injury and using a moderately O3-susceptible species like the date palm. The latter view is confirmed by the few variations of the ChlF parameters, that occurred only under EO. The results of the current study could be applied in several scientific fields, such as precision agriculture and plant phenotyping.

Highlights

  • No investigation into the photosynthetic performance of plants seems complete without chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlF) data [1]

  • We tested the capability to rapidly, precisely, and simultaneously estimate the number of pulse-amplitude-modulation ChlF parameters commonly calculated from both dark- and light-adapted leaves from the reflectance of hyperspectral data collected on light-adapted leaves of date palm seedlings chronically exposed in a Free Air Controlled Exposure (FACE) facility to three ozone (O3) concentrations for 75 consecutive days

  • Comparing the full-range spectral profiles (i.e., 400–2400 nm), it was possible to distinguish with high accuracy (81% of success) plants exposed to the different O3 concentrations, especially those exposed to elevated O3 (EO) from those exposed to moderate O3 (MO) and ambient air (AA)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

No investigation into the photosynthetic performance of plants seems complete without chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlF) data [1]. Among the available types of chlorophyll fluorometers, the pulse-amplitude-modulation (PAM) fluorometry, in conjunction with the saturation pulse method, remains the most utilized approach [2,3]. This method consists of adapting a leaf to the dark until all the reaction centers are open, and expose the leaf to light. This gives rise (usually for a few seconds) to a progressive closure of PSII reaction centers, resulting in an increase in the yield of ChlF. A large number of coefficients have been calculated to quantify photochemical and non-photochemical quenching, as reported in excellent reviews (e.g., [1,2,4])

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call